The article tries to bring class struggle back into the analysis of capitalist crisis, specifically in the exposition of the economic crisis in Korea. Since the emergence of the crisis, explanations of its origin have focused largely on excessive credit expansion, either in terms of excessive state interventions (stressed by neo-liberals) or in terms of the removal of state regulation (stressed by neo-institutionalists). In our view credit expansion was a normal reaction of Korean individual capitals to growing competitive pressure imposed by the tendencies to over-production inherent in the social form of capitalist production. The development of crisis tendencies, however, does not explain the necessity of the emergence of a general crisi...
The main objective of this paper is to expand the study of the new middle class both theoretically a...
This article examines the processes of labor market restructuring and welfare reform in South Korea ...
The Korean labour movement has been broadly understood as one of the most militant trade union movem...
This article examines contemporary Korean capitalism via an analysis of state-chaebol relations in t...
This article provides an alternative interpretation of the cause of the 1997 economic crisis in Kore...
This paper examines the South Korean economic crisis of 1997–1998 and the subsequent recovery. For t...
The original Korean mode of accumulation was of great historic relevance for the process of modernis...
The 1997 financial crisis created major ripples all across Korean society. The crisis has meant not ...
After the 1997 financial crisis, the neo-liberal restructuring of the Korean political economy accel...
The 1997 Korean crisis arose as a result of external debt maturity mismatch. When the region was hit...
This article aims to examine the recomposition of capitalist work in South Korea. Based on Marx’s un...
South Koreas economic collapse of 1997 was no less dramatic than her earlier economic success for th...
The article reviews debates concerning financialization in South Korea, with a focus on ongoing argu...
Korea’s remarkable turnaround since the 1997 economic crisis has made it something of a “poster chil...
This paper examines the processes of bank and corporate restructuring in South Korea since the 1997-...
The main objective of this paper is to expand the study of the new middle class both theoretically a...
This article examines the processes of labor market restructuring and welfare reform in South Korea ...
The Korean labour movement has been broadly understood as one of the most militant trade union movem...
This article examines contemporary Korean capitalism via an analysis of state-chaebol relations in t...
This article provides an alternative interpretation of the cause of the 1997 economic crisis in Kore...
This paper examines the South Korean economic crisis of 1997–1998 and the subsequent recovery. For t...
The original Korean mode of accumulation was of great historic relevance for the process of modernis...
The 1997 financial crisis created major ripples all across Korean society. The crisis has meant not ...
After the 1997 financial crisis, the neo-liberal restructuring of the Korean political economy accel...
The 1997 Korean crisis arose as a result of external debt maturity mismatch. When the region was hit...
This article aims to examine the recomposition of capitalist work in South Korea. Based on Marx’s un...
South Koreas economic collapse of 1997 was no less dramatic than her earlier economic success for th...
The article reviews debates concerning financialization in South Korea, with a focus on ongoing argu...
Korea’s remarkable turnaround since the 1997 economic crisis has made it something of a “poster chil...
This paper examines the processes of bank and corporate restructuring in South Korea since the 1997-...
The main objective of this paper is to expand the study of the new middle class both theoretically a...
This article examines the processes of labor market restructuring and welfare reform in South Korea ...
The Korean labour movement has been broadly understood as one of the most militant trade union movem...